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John Paul put one step below sainthood

VATICAN CITY (RNS) The late Pope John Paul II, who elevated
unprecedented numbers of Catholic saints and blesseds during his 26-year
reign, joined those ranks himself on Sunday (May 1), when he was
beatified before a crowd of more than a million pilgrims.

Pope Benedict XVI declared his predecessor "blessed" -- the church's
highest honor short of sainthood -- to cheers and applause from the
crowds filling St. Peter's Square and the broad avenue beyond.

A tapestry bearing a photographic image of John Paul was unveiled on
the main facade of St. Peter's Basilica as a warm spring sun broke
through the city's unseasonably cold and rainy weather. Ebullient
pilgrims waved flags and banners with the red and white stripes of John
Paul's native Poland, chanting his signature phrase, "Be not afraid!"

"As we approached the square in the morning, we could hear the
singing, and I got a lump in my throat," said Mary Bruton Reid, an
American living in London, who said she journeyed to Rome because "John
Paul meant a lot to me" and helped inspire her return to the church.

A silver reliquary containing a vial of John Paul's blood was
displayed to the crowd, carried by two nuns: Sister Tobiana, who served
in the papal residence during John Paul's reign; and Sister Marie
Simon-Pierre Normand, who church officials say was healed of Parkinson's
disease in 2005 after praying to the late pontiff for his intercession.

A second church-certified miracle, occurring after Sunday's
ceremony, will be required before John Paul can be canonized as a saint.

Church officials hailed John Paul for staring down and ultimately
outliving communism; Cardinal Agostino Vallini, the vicar (or acting
bishop) of Rome, said John Paul was beloved by the church but "was also
feared by those who regarded him as an adversary."

In his homily, Benedict alluded to John Paul's struggle to undermine
communism in his native Poland, which started in the late 1970s when he
became an icon for the country's free labor movement, Solidarity.

The late pope "opened up society, culture, political and economic
systems to Christ," Benedict said, "turning back with the strength of a
titan -- a strength which came to him from God -- a tide which seemed
irreversible."

John Paul's beatification is one of the fastest in modern times,
coming just six years after his death. Benedict said he chose to act
with "reasonable haste," waiving the normal five-year waiting period,
because John Paul already exuded the "fragrance of sanctity" when he
died in 2005.

John Paul himself had approved the canonizations of 482 saints and
1341 beatifications -- more than all his predecessors combined. During
his 2005 funeral, crowds erupted in spontaneous shouts of "santo
subito," Italian for "a saint at once."

Advocates for victims of clergy sex abuse have objected to Sunday's
honor, arguing the late pope failed to stop the problem and even favored
the late Rev. Marcial Maciel, founder of the Legion of Christ, after
Maciel was accurately accused of sex abuse.

Following Sunday's beatification Mass, which lasted nearly three
hours, Benedict led a procession of cardinals into the basilica for a
moment of homage before John Paul's exhumed casket, which had been
placed before the main altar.

The faithful later lined up to pay their own respects to John Paul's
remains, in a process that was expected to last late into the night. On
Monday evening, the casket will be moved to its new permanent home in
the basilica's chapel of St. Sebastian, near Michelangelo's famed
sculpture of the Pieta.

Francis X. Rocca

Francis X. Rocca writes for Religion News Service.

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